New Changeparts Approach has Beam Suntory in High Spirits

By centralizing changeparts storage and management, tasking individuals to be responsible for changeparts inventory and maintenance, and rethinking changeover practices to be leaner and more efficient, operators at Beam Suntory are enjoying significantly

Cleaned, organized changepart racks in storage, prior to being deployed to their designated packaging line and filling application.
Cleaned, organized changepart racks in storage, prior to being deployed to their designated packaging line and filling application.

In 1795, a farmer and grain mill operator named Jacob Beam produced the first barrel of whiskey that would become Jim Beam, the world’s top-selling bourbon. On the other side of the world a century later, Shinjiro Torii founded Suntory in Japan in 1899, the first whiskey to suit Japanese palates. But it wasn’t until 2014 that, by combining the world leader in bourbon and the pioneer in Japanese whiskey, Beam Suntory of Chicago was born as a subsidiary of Suntory Holdings Limited of Japan.

In a whiskey and bourbon industry characterized by resistance to change, a focus on heritage, and an adherence to the original ways of distilling, packaging operations at Beam Suntory are anything but antiquated. To the contrary, Packaging World recently heard about a unique and forward-looking revolution in changeparts maintenance and changeover management on packaging equipment at the Beam Suntory Frankfort, Ky., facility. The project demonstrates how the company strikes a balance between a heritage product on the distilling side and continuous improvement and lean manufacturing on the bottling and packaging operations side.

A lot of SKUs, a lot more changeparts

With nine lines that are each bottling a wide breadth of different spirits products—bourbon, tequila, vodka, etc.—and each in a multitude of unique bottle, closure, and label formats, the Frankfort bottling plant has a lot of SKUs to manage. Naturally, these lines require a preponderance of changeparts, organized into sets, to accommodate each possible process on each line. Bottling operations at Beam Suntory span nine separate filling, capping, and case packing lines that share similar and often overlapping, but not identical, inventories of change parts like guard rails, starwheels, and timing screws.Bottling operations at Beam Suntory span nine separate filling, capping, and case packing lines that share similar and often overlapping, but not identical, inventories of change parts like guard rails, starwheels, and timing screws.

The Beam Suntory facility has sets for changeovers at each of the five major pieces of equipment on each line—sets at the rinser, sets at the filler, sets for capping operations, sets for labeling, and sets for case packing. Spanning more than nine bottling lines and varied equipment from the likes of KHS, Standard Knapp, Zalkin, and Douglas Machine, this quickly adds up.

“We have around 50 physical molds that combine to run over 80 different sets, with between 25 and 40 changeparts in any one set,” says Matt Roberge, Training Program Manager, Beam Suntory. “They run over 80 different sets because some of them are combined for specific bottles with specific labels. So, you could say there’s more than 60 physical sets, but they make up roughly more than 80 sets, on several lines, and we do more than 500 SKUs. Realistically, we are storing way over 2,000 changeparts.”

Efficient changeover is key for productivity and uptime. For Beam Suntory, that had previously meant parts carts and other storage solutions for changeparts right on the line, physically located next to the equipment or in consolidated areas that required it at point-of-use. The team was storing parts wherever they had space with parts organized on shelves and racks.

The process was completely decentralized, with each line having its own dedicated suite of changeparts and disparate sets of dedicated operators with their own clusters of knowledge about how to keep machines running best and uptime optimized.

“A lot of times operators would find that a certain worm [timing screw] works better with one set than the set it actually belongs to, and they’d take that worm, and they’d make it part of their own personal operational knowledge,” Roberge says. “But operators on the next line over might not know that.”

There are inherent redundancies in this approach. For instance, certain starwheel or timing screw sizes or configurations on Frankfort’s filler on one line might be the same as those on others. And they might be running on different days. Extrapolate those potential redundancies across the entire facility, and the potential for extraneous inventory gets bigger, with each line having entirely dedicated changeparts.

Meanwhile, in a facility where space was already at a premium, operators’ walkways around each individual line were choked with changepart storage carts. According to Roberge, the company had been aware of the potential for improved efficiency in the way the company addressed changeparts, they just didn’t have the time or space to act on it.

It wasn’t until Beam Suntory partnered with Change Parts, Inc., a Ludington, Mich., member of the AMET Packaging family, which includes such OEMs as E-Pak and Oden Machinery, that Beam Suntory unlocked the lean processes that would transform its changeparts approach.

STR project kicks off

Roberge, who was project manager on the changeparts centralization project, and the Change Parts Inc. team set out to improve changeover efficiency at Beam Suntory in what can be considered a Setup Time Reduction (STR) project. Setup Time Reduction enables the team to reduce the changeover time, thus compressing the time between runs but increasing availability of lines. To accomplish this, it requires that as much of the changeover work as possible is done while the equipment is still running the previous parts on the previous SKU, before the actual changeover to the next SKU happens. The new, dedicated space for change parts management includes inventory, cleaning, storage, and maintenance of changeparts for the entire Frankfort Beam Suntory facility. Lanes for inbound and outbound change parts carts keep workflow organized.The new, dedicated space for change parts management includes inventory, cleaning, storage, and maintenance of changeparts for the entire Frankfort Beam Suntory facility. Lanes for inbound and outbound change parts carts keep workflow organized.

Parallels from other industries include the culinary practice of mise en place, a process by which the ingredients are sliced, spices are measured, and pots and bowls chosen and arranged before a chef ever begins cooking. An analogy that applies more broadly is laying out your more formal business attire the night before a big meeting, thereby taking the decision-making, time, and thinking out of getting dressed before a high-stress presentation.

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